Johjima, Hernandez help Mariners stifle Tigers

SEATTLE (Ticker) -- It was time for a little payback for an
embarrassing three-game sweep in Detroit last week, and the
Seattle Mariners used the dominant pitching of Felix Hernandez
and two relievers to finally beat the Tigers on Saturday.

Kenji Johjima drove in a pair of runs and also stole home to
lead Seattle to a 5-0 victory and give Felix Hernandez his first
win in six weeks.

Hernandez (3-5) went seven innings, allowing just two hits,
walking none and striking out seven before being relieved by
Brandon Morrow to start the eighth. J.J. Putz worked a scoreless
ninth to hand the Tigers their major league-leading ninth
shutout of the year.

The four runs were the most the Mariners have scored in the
previous eight starts by Hernandez, who ended a personal
five-game losing streak dating to April 16.

"Felix was pretty good and we finally scored him a few runs,"
Mariners manager John McLaren said. "He had a little tired calf
and that's why we got him out of there. It was a good win and a
clean game. Good defense, a little hitting and good pitching."

Hard-throwing righthander Justin Verlander (2-8) gave up four
runs on eight hits, walking one and striking out two in seven
innings to absorb his first career loss to the Mariners after
five victories. It marked Verlander's sixth loss in his last
seven starts.

"I think he was a little hyper the first couple of innings,"
Detroit manager Jim Leyland said. "I think he gave us a chance.
I don't think his curve or changeup were as good today."

The win provided a measure of revenge for the Mariners, who were
swept in their three-game series in Detroit last week, when the
Tigers outscored them, 37-18. The Tigers won Friday's opener,
7-4, scoring all seven runs in the first inning.

Johjima got the Mariners off to a 2-0 start when he singled home
Jose Lopez and Jose Vidro in the first inning.

"The first was the key to the game," Leyland said. "We had two
on and one out and didn't score. Then they got two on and we had
a chance to get out of the inning but we couldn't do it.

The Mariners' catcher then led off the fourth with a double and,
after taking third on a groundout, broke for home on an
attempted squeeze play. He was called safe by umpire Ron Kulpa
after catcher Ivan Rodriguez dropped the ball twice while
attempting to tag him, giving the Mariners a 3-0 lead.

"On that play there was nothing I could do," Johjima said. "I
couldn't go back because I would have been out. Fortunately
Pudge (Rodriguez) dropped the ball twice and that was why I had
a chance of being safe."

It was only the fifth stolen base of Johjima's three-year major
league career and first steal of home by a Mariners catcher
since Dan Wilson did it on August 1, 1999. He swiped third base
Friday night for his first steal of the season.

"That was a better steal," Johjima said. "That you need skills
to do. This (stealing home) is something that just happened
naturally."

Ichiro Suzuki's run-scoring groundout later in the inning made
it 4-0.

Jeremy Reed hit his first home run of the season in the eighth
off reliever Aquilino Lopez for Seattle's final run.

Leyland was ejected by first base umpire Dan Iassogna after
Curtis Granderson hit a grounder to third and Adrian Beltre's
strong throw barely got the speedy runner at first, prompting a
long argument by the manager.

Hernandez looked like he might be in trouble from the start
after a hit batsman and a single put runners at first and second
with one out in the first inning. But the young Venezuelan ace
struck out Magglio Ordonez and Marcus Thames to end the inning.

The only other hit he allowed came on Ordonez's one-out single
in the fourth.

"Everything was working for me today," Hernandez said. "When my
two-seamer is working they can hit the first pitch if they want,
but they are going to get ground balls, fly balls and a lot of
quick outs.

"I am happy we got the win and it has been a long time since I
won a game, like 45 days."

The righthander said his 2-5 record at the start of the game was
not indicative of his ability.